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Air and Space museum at Dulles.
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| For anyone into sports remember that the local colleges have bball/hockey games that can be fun and less expensive than the pro teams. I take my miserable-if-bored teenage son to UMD, Georgetown games when we have a quiet weekend. |
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Here are my tips:
Drive-thru light show and dinner out after. If mom cooks, pop her on a counter stool or at the table and give her a job (snap beans, form cookie balls, etc...), drink this while I cook, etc... Movie nights at home after dinner: Elf? A Newflix movie? A new release rental? Eat dinner then go to the sofa and serve dessert/cookies while you watch a movie and have less pressure to talk. After the movie yawn and say "That was fun, see you in the morning!" Will you mom get her nails done? If BIL wants to go to a sports game, great. Let your DH do that. Or just turn on sports. Set out a big puzzle, or the giant holiday crossword and let people do that all week. |
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Craft kits. I brought a few to our TG celebration to do with the younger kids, and the older teens and many of the adults jumped right in.
The biggest hits was a holiday coaster set you embellish with "diamond painting," which is like paint-by-number but using a stylus to place tiny gems on a sticky board. https://www.target.com/p/christmas-craft-4ct-gem-art-coasters-kit-mondo-llama-8482/-/A-94469527 I found the kits at Target. They have a lot of them for all different skill levels. |
| Believe it or not, topgolf is actually very easy and fun even if you aren’t very physically active. I took my mom in her 70s there and she was able to hit pretty easily. This was a fun outing w her and my two preteens. None of us golf. |
I went to Figaro at the KC and if you didn't know that Figaro is a F you to ruling monarchs, well it is. There is fight left at the KC. It just may nit be as obvious to the average person. |
| I have a mobility-limited father coming for Christmas and he loves going on errands with us, just to go somewhere, anywhere. I wouldn’t try to feel like you have to “entertain” them. Put some movies on TV and do what you normally do. If a trip to the grocery store takes an hour, that’s part of the “doing something”. We have dinners out at different restaurants planned and some visits to local historical sites. Otherwise, it’s just being at home and following our normal routine. |
| Watch Christmas movies. You don’t need to be BUSY and they would probably prefer not to stay on the go. |
I guess the first question I'd ask is why you have allowed them to come to your home and stay in the first place. What did you hope would happen? Because that's really what your post is about. |
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Not an out of the house activity, but one of our favored multigenerational activity is frosting sugar cookies. I tried the TJ gingerbread houses, but everyone prefers the sugar cookie frosting “event”. We also watch a tv show together over the course of a visit. This Thanksgiving we watched season 5 of Only Murders in the Building. Two episodes a day - during the lulls.
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If your mom, can handle it, lunch and a stroll in Old Town Alexandria.
We always liked driving down to see Washington at night. The monuments are pretty all lit up. What happens if you give your mom and or your nephew a job in the kitchen? |
I agree with this! I had my mom snapping beans for Thanksgiving. She has so much anxiety and it's contagious and I think allowing down to sit and snap beans (a lot! We hosted 30 people) calmed her mind down and we actually had a good conversation while I cooked and she helped prep. A jigsaw puzzle is also a great idea. Some of my "bump on a log" relatives are wonderful people with neat stories but it takes a little work to curate the environment to get them to be comfortable being themselves. I also need to work on myself to practice being okay with just being together in silence sometimes. I think like many DC people I'm a very active Type A personality so need to chill myself and realize we don't need to fill every moment. The things that are dreadfully boring to me may be just enough for some people. Neither is right or wrong. This has gotten slightly easier since I took up meditating (which is still sometimes torturous but getting better). And I go for a long run in the mornings. And sometimes another in the evening or midday when I realize I "forgot" to pick up an ingredient. That makes it easier to be with my mom who could be happy just staring at me. |
University mall theatre Literally in your neighborhood |
George Mason is right in her neighborhood |
This is so lovely and compassionate. |